Cashing in On the Halal Food Industry

So, here’s the latest in the world of Halal food: just this week Thomson Reuters and Ideals ratings announced the launch of the world’s first halal food indices, called SAMI (Socially Acceptably Market Investments) Halal Food Index and SAMI Halal Participation Index in Malaysia.

Currently, the SAMI Halal Food Index comprises 200 companies listed in Muslim-majority countries with a total market capitalisation of over $100 billion.

A closer look at the index does reveal a certain bias. Out of the 200 companies listed on the index, 95 are Malaysian with the remaining belonging to Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Indonesia and Nigeria–which of course, begs the question asked time and time again: why isn’t the GCC, and the UAE in particular, cashing in on the billion-dollar halal industry?

Some, like Darhim Hashim, CEO of IHIA (International Halal Integrity Alliance), say the root cause is ignorance: “Arab and GCC countries need to first realise that there is a halal industry in the first place (…) from my own experience in the MENA region, halal seems to be taken for granted and there seems to be a mindset barrier that any business can be made out of halal. Being resource-scarce, it would make sense for these countries to focus on value-added processing and re-exporting.”